AnimaliaacceptedgenusAccepted
Charina

Charina

Gray, 1849

GBIF:229732083

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(2)

Diagnosis. As diagnosed in Head (2015), Charina possesses a lobate neural spine that is laterally expanded similar to other Charinainae, and the pterapophyses are anteriorly directed in caudal vertebrae (Kluge, 1993; Szyndlar, 1994). Charina also exhibits a non-U-shaped zygosphene in dorsal view, a strongly concave zygosphene in anterior view, a relatively depressed neural arch, an incised posterior edge of the neural arch, and no paracotylar foramina (Holman, 2000).
Jacisin Iii, John J., Lawing, A. Michelle (2024): Fossil snakes of the Penny Creek Local Fauna from Webster County, Nebraska, USA, and the first record of snakes from the Early Clarendonian (12.5 - 12 Ma) of North America. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 2) 27 (1): 1-42, DOI: 10.26879/1220, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1220
Remarks. The fossils described here are similar in size and morphology to known species of Charina. The longer neural spine, the V-shaped (dorsal), strongly concave (anterior) zygosphene, and the depressed neural arch with a relatively deeply incised posterior edge suggest that these vertebrae do not belong to the genus Lichanura; however, it should be noted that Bell and Mead (1996) have observed some intraspecific variation in these characters. As in Parmley and Walker (2003), we instead attribute this fossil to the genus Charina based on the relative length of the neural spine, which is greater than that of Lichanura, and the lack of juvenile characteristics despite being relatively small in size. Parmley and Walker (2003) have observed that Lichanura of a similar size show juvenile characteristics such as a short, high overall morphology, thin neural arch, thin and highly arched zygosphene, exceptionally short neural spine, enlarged neural canal, and a condyle that appears too large for the centrum, none of which are visible in this specimen.
Jacisin Iii, John J., Lawing, A. Michelle (2024): Fossil snakes of the Penny Creek Local Fauna from Webster County, Nebraska, USA, and the first record of snakes from the Early Clarendonian (12.5 - 12 Ma) of North America. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 2) 27 (1): 1-42, DOI: 10.26879/1220, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1220

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Source Information

Fossil snakes of the Penny Creek Local Fauna from Webster County, Nebraska, USA, and the first record of snakes from the Early Clarendonian (12.5 - 12 Ma) of North America

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Jacisin Iii, John J., Lawing, A. Michelle (2024): Fossil snakes of the Penny Creek Local Fauna from Webster County, Nebraska, USA, and the first record of snakes from the Early Clarendonian (12.5 - 12 Ma) of North America. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 2) 27 (1): 1-42, DOI: 10.26879/1220, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1220

ABSTRACT

The Penny Creek Local Fauna in southern Webster County, Nebraska, is an early Clarendonian fossil locality within the Ash Hollow Formation. Undescribed fossils from previously collected Penny Creek material represent the first record of snakes from this time interval and confirm the presence of multiple taxa immediately following the Mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum. We identified eight taxa from the locality, including one booid (Charina), three colubrines (Pantherophis, Lampropeltis, and Salvadora), a dipsadid (Heterodon /Paleoheterodon), and several natricids (Neonatrix elongata, Neonatrix magna, and Nerodia). Of these snakes, only Neonatrix is an extinct genus, Charina and Salvadora are presently extirpated from the area, and all other genera are represented in the Central Great Plains today. Habitats occupied by extant members of genera represented in the Penny Creek snake assemblage suggest a relatively open environment with loose substrates and plentiful ground cover near a permanent water source. This further corroborates previous geological and mammalian paleoecological assessments of the Penny Creek area as a somewhat open, woodland-prairie ecotone environment near a permanent, high-energy fluvial water source. Finally, the snakes of Penny Creek help contribute to our understanding of the modernization of North American snake assemblages in the Central Great Plains by providing data for a poorly understood time within the evolution of North American snakes

John J. Jacisin III. Department of Integrative Biology, The University of Texas. Austin, Texas, USA.

john.jacisin@austin.utexas.edu

A. Michelle Lawing. Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology, Texas A&M University. College Station, Texas, USA. alawing@tamu.edu

Jacisin Iii J J, Lawing A M, felipe (2024). Fossil snakes of the Penny Creek Local Fauna from Webster County, Nebraska, USA, and the first record of snakes from the Early Clarendonian (12.5 - 12 Ma) of North America. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/5kavbp accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

CC0Published 12/31/2024View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
229732083
Dataset Key
046c2f0d-62aa-4c9e-81a0-98d93b11ca7a
Origin
source
Backbone Key
9488288
Taxon ID
03B387E8FFAF320384B8FB499B36FE06.taxon
Last Crawled
6/9/2026
Last Interpreted
6/9/2026